If it isn’t representing something with a continuously various signal then it ain’t analog!
I'm not sure I'll ever click a CNN link again.
Chatbots are just the latest in a long line of everything digital being little more than a rent-seeking, ad-riddled, privacy-invading scam.
The work required to protect yourself from it all is an arms race, and LLMs only dialed up the cost.
The list goes on, and all too often rather than fixing habits they just consume in a different sense until they lapse and go back to hold habits. By trying to be the opposite of 'thing' they still let 'thing' control them. Although the fact all this author's examples are still posting about it all on tiktok doesnt have me sold one bit on them healthily disconnecting.
"It’s hard to quantify just how widespread the phenomenon is, but certain notably offline hobbies are exploding in popularity."
Assuming this is an actual trend that is actually "exploding"... I wonder what this means for the short term in the AI industry? Could we see a drop in users and then a big popping of the bubble?That does seem like a really big assumption though.
Is it so unusual for "desktop monitors" to be bigger than a MacBook that it needs to be pointed out?
- I have not had a cell phone in 5+ years
- I do not use LLMs at all outside of occasional experimentation to understand the current capabilities I am knowingly giving up
- I subscribe to no streaming services, favoring my VHS/DVD/Blu-ray/laserdisc/vinyl/cassette/cdrom/cartridge collection
- I have an extensive collection of paper, books, magazines, etc to browse and inspire me.
- I have an extensive board game collection to play when friends are around.
- I only use desktop computers at home, keeping me offline and present when not in front of one.
- I have 40+ pre-internet game consoles hooked up in my garage to 25+ CRT TVs, along with a pinball machine, 3 arcade cabinets, and an OG VGA PC gaming station.
- I have an EE/craft corner with soldering irons, 3D printers, hand tools, and everything I need to make a lot of my own stuff at home.
- I have an extensive collection of mechanical puzzles to keep my mind constantly solving new deductive reasoning problems with no screen time
- I rarely leave home with any electronics, favoring an analog watch, cash, paper maps, and recently, a film camera.
- I exclusively rely on, mostly self hosted, open source software for all my work so I am the one in control of what it does and how I use it. I also FOSS license 100% of my work as well.
- I co-run two tech companies from Silicon Valley
- I regularly invent and deploy new security defense tactics and tools
- I hang out with maybe 10 IRL friends every week on average
- I travel often, including internationally. (I do take a tiny laptop with me when traveling)
- I have a family
Turns out, all of the above balances out just fine, and I am so much happier keeping as much of my life and mind grounded in the real world as possible.
I think if AI succeeds in this way, it's going to be extremely bad.
Anecdotally, I have friends who have recently bought turntables out of the blue and gotten into vinyl. Other friends who never had any interest in my analog cameras are asking about film. My wife has even switched from scrolling Instagram at night to working on a crossword book with a pencil.
None of them have put it exactly this way, but in divisive times, I think social media is just exhausting. And now you can't even really tell what's real.